SONOS ZonePlayer 90 Wireless Music Player Product Description:
- Stream all the music on earth to your speakers
- Includes Sonos CONNECT Power Cord Flat Ethernet Cable Quickstart Guide with Setup CD
- Play alone or link to other Sonos music players in your home
- Control everything from your smartphone or tablet
- Finished in sleek White
Product Description
Customer Reviews
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
157 of 158 people found the following review helpful.
Simple to install; great sound
By S. Hill
The way Sonos works isn't immediately obvious so I hope it will help if I set it out as I understand it. For the review, just skip this bit. I put a copy of this review on the zone bridge page too, having reached the age where I repeat myself.Sonos attaches itself to your wifi network and allows you to play music which you have ripped onto your computer eg using iTunes.Sonos the company provides three sorts of device. They renamed them in November 2011, so I have included the new names too:players - unamplified (eg ZP90, this item, which Sonos have now renamed "Connect"); amplified (ZP120/Connect:Amp); and amplified with speakers (S3/Play:3, S5/Play:5)a bridge (BR100/Bridge)a controller (eg Sonos Control or your phone, tablet or computer - the software is free)You need to attach a player or a bridge to your wireless router, so if your router is in your living-room then you simply attach the zone player to your router and you're off. If - as at Casa Stevie - the router is in the hall then you need a zone bridge which you attach to the router so that you can have the zone player in the living-room. The zone bridge doesn't play music, it just provides a link to your router.So to the review, which is of the BR100 and the ZP90. In the box you get the bridge, an ethernet cable and power cable. The zone bridge itself is small and not unattractive - like a smaller mac mini. You also get a sheet of paper which describes the 4 steps needed to set it up, the CD which contains the software, and a booklet about the system.In the ZP90 box you get the player (again, nice looking, a bit bigger than the bridge) and likewise all the cables you could reasonably ask for: ethernet, phono-phono, phono-3.5mm jack. The cables themselves don't look very high quality and I'll replace them, but they're fine for the time being.Set up is easy-peasy (I did it on my Mac and on a Dell laptop running Vista). The program automatically downloads the latest software and installs it. You then use the software to connect to the individual items (one at a time: not, as I tried to do, both bridge and player!) and then direct the system to the music library/ies you want it to use. I had 150GB in iTunes Media on my Mac mini (actually, on a Samsung Story hard disk attached to it) and it took about 20 minutes to index that. When I then added the iTunes library on Mrs Stevie's laptop, it took another 40 minutes.Then it was time to listen.Playing the ZP90 through the hifi (Cyrus 7 amplifier, Mordaunt Short speakers) really shows up the difference between lossless and lossy formats, so much so that you may decide to re-rip your CDs into a lossless format (as I have now done). There is a clear depth and spread in the lossless format (I'm using Apple lossless) that is completely missing in the compressed versions (MP3, AIFF, AAC etc). The good news is that hard disk space is cheap!The sound quality isn't quite up to my (10-year-old) Musical Fidelity CD player, but it's surprisingly close, and certainly good enough for me to leave most of my rock and pop CDs in the attic having ripped them to Apple Lossless format. And the convenience of having all of my and the missus's CD collection available from our iPhones is terrific.As you will have noticed, I didn't buy a controller (How much? They must be kidding) but downloaded the app onto the iPhones. It's great, and Mrs S is much less likely to lose her beloved iPhone than a controller. You can use an iPod Touch too, and Android phones etc.And all this is without mentioning the internet radio which also is available on the Sonos and which works as simply and efficiently as the rest of the system.Addendum for Mac users: in my original review, I mentioned as a slight problem the occasional failure to find tracks or delay in playing them on my Mac (not a problem on my wife's laptop). I thought it was linked to the external drive going to sleep, but I think I was wrong: a bit of research suggests that there is a problem if you're running your Mac on Airport (ie wirelessly). As long as you have a wired (Ethernet) connection for the Mac itself - the Sonos kit stays wireless - then it works.I don't think it's a problem which affects PCs - certainly we've had no problem with the laptop which is wireless.Sorry for the long review.
19 of 19 people found the following review helpful.
Fantastic - great Spotify integration.
By Mellon
In the past I have tried to stream music using a wireless network in conjunction with several Apple "Airport Express" devices - this set-up produced a limited amount of success - music would often drop-out for tens of seconds and the devices would regularly stop functioning and need to be replaced.After reading several excellent reviews on the Sonos kit I decided to order a Sonos system consisting of a ZoneBridge BR100, ZonePlayer 90 and the CR200 remote control.I have been blown away but just how good, and simple, this system is to use. Set-up was very easy - effectively just a matter of hooking up and linking the various devices. The music quality has been absolutely fantastic - there has been absolutely no drop-out to date (and I am using exactly the same network as I did with the Apple "Airport Express"). The kit itself is built really well and has a small footprint.The CR200 remote control is really well thought-out and contains a simple and easy to navigate interface while at the same time presenting the user with all the functionality you could need.One of the most impressive features of this system is the fact that you can seamlessly link to Spotify (that is if you are a Spotify premium account subscriber @ 9.95 p/m) - this has enabled me to set-up vast playlists of Spotify music which I can listen to via my Sonos system as easily as if it were in my iTunes library.All-in-all one of the most impressive pieces of tech kit I have purchased in the last few years.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
Absolutely Brilliant
By Mr. Shaun Pugh
I have been using one of the Philips Streamium wireless music players for a few years now, but it started to get a bit long in the tooth (no integration with online services, no support for lossless formats, slow interface, etc) so I decided to look for a replacement.I bought one of these instead and after just an hour's use I'm thinking why didn't I get one of these sooner. An absolute doddle to setup (I've got the desktop software running on both Win7 and OS X) and the integration with Napster and online radio is excellent. Response times are virtually instantaneous (maybe a split second delay with Napster - but that's coming over the web) and I can use my iPhone as a remote. The only downside is that I now need to buy an iPod touch to use as a remote as my Mrs wants my iphone to control music, but the latest Sonos remote costs more than and iPod Touch, so take your pick I guess.First impressions are very good. The only slight gotcha with the setup was that I had to turn off my firewall during the installation of the desktop software, then re-enable it afterwards. Locating music on my NAS was easy - just point it to the UNC path (\\servername\share) and give it a username and password. Napster, just give it your user account details and for radio, just tell it where you live so you can get local channels too. At this point I cannot think how they can possibly make it any better. Integration with Spotify maybe? Otherwise it is 10/10 from me.
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